This document is a 'Economics Monitor' slide produced by the Goldman Sachs Investment Management Division, likely dating to November 2017 based on the data periods shown (Oct/Nov). It presents statistical tables on US Labor Markets, US Consumer Sentiment, China Activity, and European economic indicators. The document contains a Bates stamp (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025690), indicating it was obtained during a House Oversight Committee investigation, likely regarding financial records related to Jeffrey Epstein's accounts at Goldman Sachs, though Epstein is not explicitly named on this specific page.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Donald Trump | President of the United States |
Mentioned in bullet points regarding deals announced during his visit to China.
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| Name | Type | Context |
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| Goldman Sachs |
Investment Management Division
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| Investment Strategy Group |
Cited in footer
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| Bloomberg |
Cited in footer
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| Markit |
Source for PMI data
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| University of Michigan |
Source for Consumer Sentiment data (U. of Mich.)
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| House Oversight Committee |
Indicated by Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT
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| Location | Context |
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Labor Market and Consumer Sentiment data subject
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Mentioned as explanation for jobless claims miss
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Activity Data subject and location of President Trump's visit
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PMI and Activity Data subject
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Data subject
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Data subject
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Data subject
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Data subject
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"The US labor market continues to tighten; the small miss in claims is largely explained by Puerto Rico."Source
"Chinese trade growth moderated; deals announced during President Trump’s visit are unlikely to reduce trade deficit."Source
"Eurozone data came in mixed relative to consensus expectations, but still points to above-trend growth in the region."Source
Complete text extracted from the document (2,007 characters)
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